Highland Park Public Library Local Newspapers Site

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 23 Jun 1955, p. 8

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

*fr Hsy ^xJ- h L y;n ^N *• l'->'^r^ " ' - j f ">1,1 "i» 'w^'1 .M,. ge ElgW "Av^'--' TOE McHENRY PLAINDEALER 1 pi Society jtjj WSCS CLOSES SEASON WITH .Thursday, June 23, Reiker; secretary, Mrs. L; J. McCracken; treasurer, Mrs. ' B. N. Freund. Circle 4 -- Chairman, Mrs. Alts in Olson;, secretary, Mrs. Leonard Nelson; devotions, Mrs. Herbert Engdahl. The first meeting of the fall In a pretty wedding solemnized in the Sacred Heart""chapel of St. Patrick's Catholic x church, will bo a pot-luck lawn party Oto ! Miss Georgie (Patterson) Owen MISS OWEN WED ON SATURDAY TO PHILLIP AHLBERG June 28 Fox River Valley Camp, be held in September at" Mrs. "j. | daughter °of Harold Patterson | R.N.A., Outing -- 12:30 p.m. '-,J - ! QWen Qf McHenry and Mrs. Hoi- i June 24-25-26 lis F. Coomer of Santa Monica. ! Johnsburg Community Club's J. Gruenfeld's home. Mrs. Stinespring Heads Board For Year's Program LAST RITES HELD ON SATURDAY FOR MRS. P. F. MILLER j Funeral services were held at The last of the season's meet- 9 o'clock Saturday morning, June ings'of the Women's Society for 18, for MTs. Peter F. Miller of Christian Service was held on ' Richmond Road, who died at June 16 in the Community Meth- ! Memorial hospital Wednesday, odist church and included in-:June 15. Interment was in the stallation of officers. > church cemetery. Thanks for a job well done Mrs. Miller's death followed a by the retiring president, Mrs. thrpe-month illness. Edwin Wittrock, were expressed; One of McHenry's most reby the group with the gift of a spected citizens, Catherine Stillstraw basket-handbag. Ann Varese, then secretary of spiritual guidance, opened the meeting with devotions when the group re-convened in the sanctu- ' ary after first being served dessert. , Rev. J. Elliott Corbett addressed this final meeting to ask that the circles become everwidening Circles of Friendship that will not be cliques, but "will click" for Christian sprvice. Quoting from Stringfellow Barr's "Let's Join the Human Race," ; Mr. Corbett proved to those pres- i ent that the chance of being i born among the favored ones ! who are white, healthy and in 1 the United States was a slim | one, and that most babies yrho do ' not make this wise and happy I choice have poor health, shorter lives and emptier stomachs. ! Further showing the need for | Christian circles to enlarge, Mr. Corbett stressed the fact that we ! are losing Christians to Mo- i in£ was born on June 4> 1878- a hammedanism and showed the I daughter of Henry and , Anna wonderful work that can' be done f Stilling. to educate needy millions and ' ®n. 1899, she was ST PATRICK'S 1 V s CHURCH SCENE OF BEAUTIFUL WEDDING' A pretty June wedding was solemnized at St., Patrick's Catholic church on Wednesday morning, June 15, wfien Miss Margaret Wiihl. daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Frederick F. Wahl of Evanston and Orchard Beach, became the Calif.! became the bride of Mr. 1 Annual Carnival -- Fisto Fry at: bride of Mr. Joseph Cappazzoli, Phillip E. Ahlberg, son of Mrs. | 6 p.m. Friday --- Dinner at Noon Irene Nautwick and H. W. Ahl- i Sunday ^.berg of Chicago. The service was • Bake Sale -- Muzzy's Hall, read bv Rev Fr McGowan at Ringwood -- Sponsored by the 11:30 o'clock.' ' ! W.S.C.S. -- 10:30 a.m. Mrs. Paul (Marilyn) Bradford! ...... '""L 25 nf,„„ " - o.f S_ an.t a Moni• ca, Cant., , sdicsttperri, Installation of Officers_ _ -- of„ ,th. e bride, act. ed, as',m ation onft ;, Women of uie Moose -- "L"odog5e honor and bridesmaids were' • Pm- _ „ Miss Mary' Nye and Miss Delores 1 Smith, friends, chey were . at- J^ f ow Lunches, .. . .... . ninu Card Party -- Noon -- St. Peters feta cummerbunds and scoop j 7 Chrtot'M Mothers necklines They wore picture | * . hats of the seme color and ca£ | pub]ic L&wn e Ca»d party _ ned cascade bouquets of Pink j Gruenfeld Home _ 1 ? __ carnations. | Sponsored by Circle 3, W.S.C.S. Miss Owen chose a gown of j June 29 chantilly lace over taffeta, styled. Joint W.cio.F. Picnic -- Johns*, with long lace sleeves pointed at . tjUrg Community Grounds the wrist, scalloped neckline and j July 3» lace cummerbund. The skirt ex-j Bake gale _ gt Mary's gchool tended into a chapel sweep. She Hall After 8;30 Masg __ SpQn_ wore a scalloped tiara trimmed, sore(j jjy Christian Mothers and in seed pearls and carried a cas- ; Aitar cnriptv cade bouquet of white orchids j July 6 and stcphanotis. I Dessert Luncheon and Style Kathleen Von Esser of Chica- | Show --- l p.m. -- Johnsburg go was the pretty little flower j Community Hall -- Sponsored MRS. PETER F. MILLER help them thus to gain self-help married to Peter F. Miller and girl, wearing white lace over pink. Henry Bogert of Chicago, a friend of the groom, served as best man and groomsmen were Richard Rousch and Robert Battaglia, both of Chicago. Ushers ] by St. John's P.T.A. July 13 Dessert Card Party and Bailee Sale -- Acacia Hall --» 1:30 p.m. -- Sponsored by O.E.S. , July 16-17 St. Peter's Church Carnival -- were Alvin Ahlberg of Chicago, I Spring Grove by telling of Dr. Frank Laubach's j t^le C0UP'e set up housekeeping reading system and "Each One ; ™ Lakemoor vicinity, moving Teach One plan. The need is I to McHenry in 1939. In 1949 also here in our own area, Mr. ] *-hey observed their golden wed- Corbett stated, and told that | anniversary at a celebration groups are asked to visit the j &tterided by 200 members of their wards at Elgin State hospital i fami^y and friends. one afternoon a month to play deceased was a faithful games and, if possible, to bring • memher of St. Mary's Catholic refreshments -- but mostly to c^urch of the Christian Mobring a reminder of. God's love ! thers and Altar society. through Christian friendship. Survivors include, besides thte New Board j husband, seven children, George, The new board members who! Carles, Rov, Victor and Mrs. Methodist Church were then installed by Rev. Cor- i Gillian Hettermann of McHenry, j Workshops Hekt bett are: President, Mrs. Harry' Alfred °f Ringwood and Lucy of j nianninp- wniftshnn for Stinespring: vice-president, Mrs. Waukegan; four brothers, Henry, Methodist churches John Varese: promotion 5ecre- and Joseph B. stilling of ^°rth^st the M^ea'on £ S tuauryv, .mMirss.. *FTreeda Wwnhiutfiiieelida-, rree-- McHenry and William of Rich-' n*ld •V tn® wneaton Methodist fmin ci<:tori! church m Evanston on June 15, cording secretary, Mrs. Richard • four sisters, Mrs. Anna; _i.i__.j_.. ^ uncle of the groom, and Paul Bradford of Santa Monica, brother- in-law of the bride. Mrs. Nautwick was attired in a pink sheath dress embroidered in white, with sheer pink coat, and had a white orchid corsage. Breakfast was served to the family and wedding party at the Legion home, where a receptionat 5:30 was attended by 300 guests. Following a trip into Wisconsin, the couple will reside with her father. Miss Owen graduated in 1953 from the local high school and the groom the same year from Lane Technical high school in Chicago. Both are employees of Kemper Insurance company. I . August 3 Christian Mother ami Society Picnic Altar NEWLYWEDS Km* Barrows; treasurer, Mrs. EdgarBrmvn of Wauconda, Mrs. Fran- Nardi; spiritual life, Mrs. Lisle , ces Miller of Ringwood, Mrs. Bassett; missionary education, ! Justen of McHenry and Mrs. Vaughn Jones; Christian Mrs- Freund of Johnsburg. social relations, Mrs. Clyde Bai- She was preceded in death by a ley; student work. Mrs. Herbert j son- Edward, a daughter, Frances, Engdahl; children's work, Mrs a brother, John H. Stilling, and C L. Wright; supply work. Mm.,* Mrs. Elizabeth Miller. , ^ Va„ehn rola3lons and Albin Olson; literature and pub-; ~ ; Mrs. Ben Francke. publicity ica ions, Mrs. Fred Svoboda; j /&{•hf • . I drove in to the evening session social coordinator. Mrs. Donald; £B3Z$I I Af hITi I i™. Barger; publicity, Mrs. Ben I lUlKI I AL ! ^ey are a" the Communi- ^ur 'LJES.'SS1 HOtOCHWOSTS son of Mr. and Mrs. Louis Cappazzoli of Des Plaines. Rev. Fr. Edward C. Coakley officiated at the 9 o'clock ceremony. Bouquets of gladioli decorated the side altars for the nuptial service. Miss Wahl, given in marriage by h.T father;- was radiant in £ ballerina length gown of white silk shantung with beaded, lace bodice. A shoulder length veil foil from a white ribbon hat'and she carried a bouquet of carna-. tions and lilies of the valley. Miss Patricia Caputo of Orchard Beach, a friend of the bride, acted as maid of honor, attired in a blue crystalette dress, ballerina length. She wore a pink floral band on her head and carried pink carnations. Raymond Braun of Des Plaines served as best man. Both the mother of the bride and groom wore blue nylon net dresses. Mrs. Wahl with white accessories and Mrs. Cappazzoli with navy blue. They had orchid corsages. Breakfast was served to members of the immediate families and the bridal party at the Town club following the ceremony. The couple left later in the day on a trip into Wisconsin and upon their return will live in Des Plaines. Mrs cappazzoli attended St. Mary's grade and high school in Nauvoo, 111., and is employed at the Wahl Jewelry store in Des Plaines. The groom is in business in that city. to make up this number. Mrs. J Miss Joan Hansen and Thomas Harry Stinespring, new president j Holochwost of McHenry were of the Women s Society for' Christian Service, and a party which included Mrs. Fred. Whitfield, correspondence secretary. PLAN STYLE SHOW AT ST. PETER'S HALL JUNE 28 The Christian Mothers sodality of St. Peter's parish, Spring Grove, is sponsoring a- style show, luncheon and card party on Tuesday, June 28. The serving of spaghetti and meat balls and homemade pies will begin at noon, followed by the style show and cards. Models are the Misses Beverly Bergsma, Kathryn Tinney and Ann Spindler, Mesdames Arthur Klein, Marvin Arsenau, Paul Weber, Elmer Smith and Mary Klein. Children modeling include Chris tod Carol Young, Debbie Ann arid Billy Foley, Karen Firscbing,v- Marilyn sMiller and PjDuline Brown. Hie public is invited to attend. Francke; youth work, Mrs. H. ! Fike. j The new circle officers also | installed are: Circle 1 -- Chairman, . Mrs. ' George Prawl; vice-phairman, Mrs. Robert Orthwein; secretary, Mrs. Walter Haug; treasurer, Mrs. Fred Heide. Circle 2 -- Co-Chairmen, Mesdames Barrows and Sanford; secretary-treasurer, Mrs. Glenn Sarner. Circle 3 -- Co-Chairmen, Mesdames J. J. Gruenfeld and George yjctu Mrs. Nellie Bacon sustained a broken hip in a fall in her home Wednesday evening of last week and has been confined to Memorial hospital, Woodstock. Ed Holle of Oak Park has been a patient at West Suburban hospital there. He is the husband of the former Mabel Conway of McHenuy and is well known in McHenry. ty Methodist church in McHenry. A group from the Ringwood Methodist church also attended the evening session. The next workshop session will be held on July 7 at the Methodist camp grounds in Des Plaines. The board members and other church women interested are invited to come and bring along their families and picnic lunches. united in marriage Saturday. June 11, in a pretty wedding which took place at St. Patrick's Catholic church. Lend Uncle Sam Your Dollars HARDEST BUSIEST CHEAPEST WORKERS IN TOWN PLA1NDEALER WANT ADS Lend Uncle Sam Your Dollars WED JUNE 11 i Photo by Kolin THE LAWRENCE JENSENS At Wonder Lake's Nativity Evangelical Lutheran church on Saturday, June 11, Mrs. Clara Baker of Chicago and Mr. Lawrence Jensen of Wonder Lake exchanged nuptial vows. They are residing in" Wonder Lake. DICK WISSELL NAMED SECTION FJFA. OFFICER (Continued from Page 1) FIRST DISTRIBUTION OF TAX BILL MADE DURING PAST WEEK The first distribution of the current collection of taxes, totalling about 50 per cent of the entire tax bill charged for collection, was placed in the mail last wee"k by Treasurer Verpon Kays.s The amount was $2,689,350, distributed to the following taxing bodies: $260,000 to the county; $86,000 to the towns; $89,800 road and bridge outside corporations; $117,100, hard roads; $18,900, bonds; $20,700, one-haif road and bridge inside corporations; $187,150, corporations; $16,500, park districts; $1,400, cemeteries; $7,800, Harvard hospital; $2,200, libraries; $41,850, fire protection districts; $612,900 high schools; $388,000, consolidated schools; $828,350, district schools; $10,000, county clerk for extending faxes. ALCOHOLICS ANONYMOUS Alcoholics Anonymous is forming a group in the McHenry area. The Community Methodist church has offered space in its building for these meetings. Anyone interested in such a meeting might contact the church offices. BANK EMPLOYEES The McHenry State Bank is happy to announce the addition of five new employees to its staff. Roberta Wirfs of Lilymoor, Shirley Berthoux of Huemann's subdivision and Martha Boldt of Wonder Lake are now employed in the bookkeeping department. Donald Wattles and Paul Jessup have been employed for the summer months. Don is on vacation from Miami university and Paul from McHenry high school. degree. Only those boys holding the State Farmer degree are allowed to run for F.F.A. office higher than the chapter level. Thursday, June 16, was filled with excitement with nominations, speeches of nominees and election of the four main state F.F.A. officers -- president, vice-president, secretary-treasurer and reporter. Then the schedule included the election of vicepresidents for each of the twentyfive sections in the state. Vies With Nine Nine other tooys from Section 6 were eligible to run for the office, held last year by Arnold Wirtz of Wauconda. Dick was elected by a large majority and" becomes the , first McHenry F.F.A. member to hold this high office. He stayed at Springfield until Friday noon in order to attend an officers' training school. He is now responsible, for the coordination and encouragement of the fourteen F.F.A. chapters in Section 6 in next year's program. Thursday afternoon, Dick's parents arrived at the convention to lend their moral support during the State Farmer Degree ceremony scheduled for later in the day. They wfcre impressed by the enthusiasm and action of the boys at the convention and were very proud to* learn of their son's election to office. That evening they sat with nearly 1,000 other parents and watched 352 members receive the State Farmer degree. The ceremony .was simple but impressive, for only the finest Future Farmers in Illinois received the coveted award. Mark Zimmerman Contest Finalist (Continued from Page 1) these boys cannot help but be more safety-conscious in the future. Mark, definitely one of the top contestants in the state, will only be a junior next year and he is looking forward to further competition. He is vice-president of the McHenry chapter and, as such, was a delegate to the state F..F.A. convention. Outstanding as a Future Farmer in every way during his first two years in high school, there is every reason to expect that he will apply for the State Farmer degree next year. Importance is penalized, but in this brief span of life it feels good to feel important. Send your contribution to the Beach Fund, McHenry, 111., toidiay. Musin' and Meanderin' (Continued fron\ Page i) of her granddaughter, Miriam Marum. Mrs. Justea remained to enjoy the reception until 7 o.'clock in the evening and retained enough energy to be about early the next morning and visiting her fahiily. J. H. Ritter- of Orchard Beach, credit manager for Shell Oil company, was one of 160 members of the Chicago division of the "Ten and Over" club to meet for their annual luncheon at the Edgewater Beach hotel last week, after which they 'enjoyed the Cubs-Giants baseball game at.^ Wrtgley Fieid. The employees attending the luncheon represented 2,667 years of accumulated service. -- The June issue of "Alon," a national magazine published by the College of Jewish Studies in Chicago, contains an article describing the newly formed Jewish study group of the county as unique. A number of local residents were instrumental in starting the group and have given much of their time for its success. According to the . article, this is believed to be the first time ^ that Jewish education on a coun- f ty-wide basis has ever been undertaken in a rural area. The half of the world able to make ends meet is unable to understand why the other half is always short. Mr. and Mrs. William Weyland are the parents of a daughter, born at Memorial hospital on June 20. ^ Mr. and Mrs. Walter "Sonny" Miller are the parents of their second son, born June 22 at Memorial hospitai. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Blake are the parents of a son, born June 15 at Memorial hospital. He has been named' Charles Joseph. IIOLSTEIN MEMBERS Announcement has been received that James Kattner anld Harry J. Diedrich have been accepted as junior members of the Holstein-Friesian Association of America. They were eligible to become junior members of the organization for having done satisfactory dairy club work with registered Holsteins. Mr. anid Mrs. Burns and two sons of Mareno, Calif., are spending two weeks with her parents, Dr. and Mrs. Henry Freund. Get into Hie Fine-Car Class... i Classified Ads bring results. ! Place yours with the Plaindealer -today. w c \0o* e ^ 9 ^ '.vei C*VV.°/L *** \H° ^\c®s' „o\cS ® »Wm STAR CHIEF CUSTOM CATA LIN A ...at a cos/ you can easily afford! W'hh at is a fine car? What sets a certain few apart in the world's esteem . . . wins them first place in most people's desire? First and foremost, a fine car is a style-setter--a real advance in smart appearance. Naturally, it's also a pace-setter--a. fundamental forward step engineering-wise. At the wheel you should know that you've reached the peak of performance-- experienced aft all-new kind of flashing, vigorous, smoothly delivered power. There's more, hi course. It must be enviable for sheer luxurious domfort, for restful readability, for thought-quick handling ease. And it must,! above all, be wholly dependable, for only a trustworthy car can be called "fine.'V If this meets your definition of a fine car and you want it, there's nothing in your way. For tUls description is right off the Pontiac score sheet--a short but perfect picture of this big, powerful, futurefashioned car. And Pontiac"s prices fit comfortably into anybody's new-car buying plans! Come in for the rest of the reasons why this is the faBtest-selling Pontiac in history-- such as the inside story of America's most modern and efficient automotive power plant, the sensational Strato-Streak V-8. And get the trade-in appraisal this great success permits. We're sure we can prove that now's your to move into the fine-car class! 860 TWO-DOOR, 6-PASS. SEDAN ILLUSTRATED BELOW 2163" State and local taxes, if any, extra. Price may vary in surrounding communities due to freight differential. Sfl DRIVE HISTORY'S FASTEST-SMLLIMO OVERTON CADILLAC-PONTIAC CO 400 FRONT STIREET PHONE 17 MeHENRY, ILLINOIS

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy